02:33 - VIGJust sayin' I remember nikarg's Sodom review on the front page, that album was like 30 years old

02:27 - ScreamingSteelUSTechnically, Che's Manunkind review was too old to be featured on the front page. That was a special exception; usually, we prefer to keep our reviews within three-to-four months, with six months as an absolute cutoff.

02:14 - VIG@Radu Of course! I don't think it's too old to be featured on the front page. Look at Che's Manunkind review

00:09 - RaduPPublished a review for an album that's a bit too old to be featured on the front page, but you guys will read it, right? [link]

From the deepest and darkest burrows of the Belgian underground, comes Yhdarl. These installments of the "Drone Nightmares" are all single-mindedly devoted to ambient soundscapes. To being dispersed in vapor form, air-freshener-wise. This second, colorless nightmare is a trip to absolute nothingness. Homage to being totally enraptured by cataclysmal drone mayhem. Lifeless, through and through. That is what it wants to be, and that is what it is. Lifeless.

The weight of listening to the sound of a big empty space is enormous.

At first I intended to compare this album to a fifty-minute-long, excessively unchanging lullaby. Later on I realized this was fundamentally wrong. This isn't like falling asleep. It's far, far worse. This is a free-fall plunge into the void itself. Like an overdose of benzodiazepines after living a whole week on a liquid ecstasy-only diet.

Listening to Buried Burnt Earth can be pictured best as listening to the extremely monotonous chant of a faceless Siren: in a weird way very alluring and addictive but also deadly uncomfortable. It's like an entirely abandoned Titanic slowly sinking into a hermetically sealed, desolate dark swamp.

The void is out there. Buried Burnt Earth is its business card.

EPILOGUE: Once, I was enjoying Buried Burnt Earth. Suddenly, without any warning, it was over and Firewind's "You Have Survived" kicked in. Pretty applicable, sure. But the abrupt changeover scared the shit out of me. At that instant, I knew what noise pollution was. True story.